I hope this is the correct StackExchange, since I am only using StackOverflow for Web development, but need some help with my server configuration.
I would like to install VMware vSphere Hypervisor 5 on my server here at home and run a view machines on it such as Windows Server 2008 and Red Hat.
Hello!
I have a problem determining exactly which Processor I have.
It seems like I need to have a Intel T2300 in order to run Parallels. (I need Windows to run next to Ubuntu in order to use "Citavi")
Up to now I thought my Thinkpad R60 was equipped with this processor.
We're a small dev team that runs instances VMWare Ubuntu hosted on AMD x64 machines. Our hardware will be upgraded to Intel i7, but we want to continue to use the virtual images we've built.
I'm thinking about a new laptop, which has Intel VT support, but recently I discovered a feature other than Intel® Virtualization Technology (VT-x), which is Intel® Virtualization Technology for Directed I/O (VT-d).
Is VirtualBox or VMware taking advantage of it? How much performance increase can it bring when I use VirtualBox or VMware?
There's an link explaining CPU features
I have a Windows 7 64 bit and my CPU supports virtualization and I have enabled it. As a guest OS I have installed Ubuntu 64 Bit and I checked Hardware virtualization in VirtualBox but after running this command egrep -c '(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo it returns 0 meaning my hardware doesn't support virtualization. What can I do?
Good evening everybody. Been working at this problem for 2 days now. I cannot for the life of me enable 3D support in Vmware 9 guests.
Hardware: Dell Latitude E5520 laptop.
Processor: Intel i7-2620M CPU @ 2.70GHz × 4.
Memory: 8GB.
Video: Intel Sandybridge Mobile x86/MMX/SSE2
OS: Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS, 32 bit.
Vmware Workstation: 9.0.1 build-894247
Glxgears functions fine.
Hello everyone,
I want to install kvm on my desktop PC to learn virtualization, my cpu is intel Core i3, and I found it support VT-x on intel's page, I also enabled virtualization in BIOS,
however, I cann't find vmx flag from /proc/cpuinfo.
I want to be able to do so from both Windows and from Linux.
Hello,
I'm trying to install Ubuntu 12.04 LTS Precise Pangolin in U(EFI) mode.
Started with the Beta2 (AMD64 alternate CD), I'm now using the official release (AMD64 Alternate CD).